Article

Mechanism of the asymmetric activation of the MinD ATPase by MinE.

Department of Microbiology, Molecular Genetics and Immunology, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS 66160, USA.
Molecular Microbiology (impact factor: 5.01). 06/2012; 85(2):271-81. DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2958.2012.08110.x pp.271-81
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT MinD is a component of the Min system involved in the spatial regulation of cell division. It is an ATPase in the MinD/ParA/Mrp deviant Walker A motif family which is within the P loop GTPase superfamily. Its ATPase activity is stimulated by MinE; however, the mechanism of this activation is unclear. MinD forms a symmetric dimer with two binding sites for MinE; however, a recent model suggested that MinE occupying one site was sufficient for ATP hydrolysis. By generating heterodimers with one binding site for MinE we show that one binding site is sufficient for stimulation of the MinD ATPase. Furthermore, comparison of structures of MinD and related proteins led us to examine the role of N45 in the switch I region. An asparagine at this position is conserved in four of the deviant Walker A motif subfamilies (MinD, chromosomal ParAs, Get3 and FleN) and we find that N45 in MinD is essential for MinE-stimulated ATPase activity and suggest that it is a key residue affected by MinE binding.

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Keywords

ATP hydrolysis
 
ATPase
 
ATPase activity
 
binding site
 
binding sites
 
chromosomal ParAs
 
deviant Walker
 
heterodimers
 
key residue
 
MinD ATPase
 
MinD/ParA/Mrp deviant Walker
 
MinE-stimulated ATPase activity
 
motif family
 
motif subfamilies
 
one binding site
 
P loop GTPase superfamily
 
proteins
 
spatial regulation
 
stimulation
 
symmetric dimer